When an MCTextAtom is split, all MCBasicBlocks backed by it are
automatically split, with a fallthrough between both blocks, and
the successors moved to the second block.
llvm-svn: 188881
Summary:
LLVM would generate DWARF with version 3 in the .debug_pubname and
.debug_pubtypes version fields. This would lead SGI dwarfdump to fail
parsing the DWARF with (in the instance of .debug_pubnames) would exit
with:
dwarfdump ERROR: dwarf_get_globals: DW_DLE_PUBNAMES_VERSION_ERROR (123)
This fixes PR16950.
Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie
Reviewed By: echristo
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1454
llvm-svn: 188869
There are situations which can affect the correctness (or at least expectation)
of the gcov output. For instance, if a call to __gcov_flush() occurs within a
block before the execution count is registered and then the program aborts in
some way, then that block will not be marked as executed. This is not normally
what the user expects.
If we move the code that's registering when a block is executed to the
beginning, we can catch these types of situations.
PR16893
llvm-svn: 188849
point registers. We will need this register class later when we add
definitions for instructions mfhc1 and mthc1. Also, remove sub-register indices
sub_fpeven and sub_fpodd and use sub_lo and sub_hi instead.
llvm-svn: 188842
Update iterator when the SLP vectorizer changes the instructions in the basic
block by restarting the traversal of the basic block.
Patch by Yi Jiang!
Fixes PR 16899.
llvm-svn: 188832
load/store instructions defined. Previously, we were defining load/store
instructions for each pointer size (32 and 64-bit), but now we need just one
definition.
llvm-svn: 188830
functions be compiled as mips32, without having to add attributes. This
is useful in certain situations where you don't want to have to edit the
function attributes in the source. For now it's only an option used for
the compiler developers when debugging the mips16 port.
llvm-svn: 188826
Update testcase to be more careful about checking register
values. While regexes are general goodness for these sorts of
testcases, in this example, the registers are constrained by
the calling convention, so we can and should check their
explicit values.
rdar://14779513
llvm-svn: 188819
SystemZTargetLowering::emitStringWrapper() previously loaded the character
into R0 before the loop and made R0 live on entry. I'd forgotten that
allocatable registers weren't allowed to be live across blocks at this stage,
and it confused LiveVariables enough to cause a miscompilation of f3 in
memchr-02.ll.
This patch instead loads R0 in the loop and leaves LICM to hoist it
after RA. This is actually what I'd tried originally, but I went for
the manual optimisation after noticing that R0 often wasn't being hoisted.
This bug forced me to go back and look at why, now fixed as r188774.
We should also try to optimize null checks so that they test the CC result
of the SRST directly. The select between null and the SRST GPR result could
then usually be deleted as dead.
llvm-svn: 188779
Post-RA LICM keeps three sets of registers: PhysRegDefs, PhysRegClobbers
and TermRegs. When it sees a definition of R it adds all aliases of R
to the corresponding set, so that when it needs to test for membership
it only needs to test a single register, rather than worrying about
aliases there too. E.g. the final candidate loop just has:
unsigned Def = Candidates[i].Def;
if (!PhysRegClobbers.test(Def) && ...) {
to test whether register Def is multiply defined.
However, there was also a shortcut in ProcessMI to make sure we didn't
add candidates if we already knew that they would fail the final test.
This shortcut was more pessimistic than the final one because it
checked whether _any alias_ of the defined register was multiply defined.
This is too conservative for targets that define register pairs.
E.g. on z, R0 and R1 are sometimes used as a pair, so there is a
128-bit register that aliases both R0 and R1. If a loop used
R0 and R1 independently, and the definition of R0 came first,
we would be able to hoist the R0 assignment (because that used
the final test quoted above) but not the R1 assignment (because
that meant we had two definitions of the paired R0/R1 register
and would fail the shortcut in ProcessMI).
This patch just uses the same check for the ProcessMI shortcut as
we use in the final candidate loop.
llvm-svn: 188774
Previously we used a const-pool load for virtually all 64-bit floating values.
Actually, we can get quite a few common values (including 0.0, 1.0) via "vmov"
instructions of one stripe or another.
llvm-svn: 188773